KantDane21
Moliere
KantDane21
I think Allison might be rendering the argument like that so that it's basically a non-sequiter — Moliere
Moliere
If p, then q
Not q
Therefore, not p
you said that is a non-sequitur...did you mean appears like a non-sequitur? — KantDane21
KantDane21
Janus
Leontiskos
"Anything" is a remarkably vague category! That might also be what Allison is getting at -- we started with "Anything", and didn't draw out the deduction that "Action" is an anything. — Moliere
Moliere
The argument could also be read syllogistically, in which case 'anything' makes more sense:
All appearances are known mediately
No first-person actions are known mediately
Therefore, no first-person actions are appearances
Of course this is also valid. — Leontiskos
ItIsWhatItIs
If anything is an appearance it is known mediately,
The individual knows that he (or she) acts non-mediately
Thus, action cannot be an appearance. — KantDane21
alan1000
alan1000
Alkis Piskas
Modus tollens logic is of the form "If A, then B. Not A. Therefore, not B."as far as i can tell this is a modus tollens argument.
seems perfectly valid. (it does not have the form of a fallacy) — KantDane21
L'éléphant
Check again.Modus tollens logic is of the form "If A, then B. Not A. Therefore, not B." — Alkis Piskas
Valid and sound.If anything is an appearance it is known mediately,
The individual knows that he (or she) acts non-mediately
Thus, action cannot be an appearance. — KantDane21 — ItIsWhatItIs
Alkis Piskas
Leontiskos
Alkis Piskas
Leontiskos
What did I say exactly that is wrong and why? — Alkis Piskas
Modus tollens logic is of the form "If A, then B. Not A. Therefore, not B." — Alkis Piskas
Alkis Piskas
I know what I said. I asked what exactly is wrong with that.You said this, as ↪L'éléphant pointed out:
Modus tollens logic is of the form "If A, then B. Not A. Therefore, not B."
— Alkis Piskas — Leontiskos
Count Timothy von Icarus
L'éléphant
Except that we can't do it that way. Remember the OP's question is "IS it both valid and sound?"We could thus set this up as a proof by contradiction by assuming our premises and assuming that "action IS appearance." This results in a contradiction where action both is and is not a member of the set of "things known mediately," — Count Timothy von Icarus
Ludwig V
If anything is an appearance it is known mediately,
The individual knows that he (or she) acts non-mediately
Thus, action cannot be an appearance. — KantDane21
Mww
Perhaps other people have recognized what seems to me to be obviously wrong, but I haven't picked it up. — Ludwig V
Ludwig V
This makes it clear that the question is whether action is known only non-mediately, and that would seem to be false, which makes the argument as reformulated valid, but unsound. — Janus
Mww
I didn't understand that this was a Kantian discussion. — Ludwig V
Count Timothy von Icarus
Leontiskos
A syllogism suffering premises with no relation to each other, is a paralogism — Mww
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